Wiley, the peg-legged poet in the comic strip B.C., is sitting under a
tree writing on a clay tablet.

"'Love
makes the world go round'
Is a phrase that Romanticists sing 
An intangible substance made up of woo,
That is loosed at the advent of spring.
A love, not of grace, but of passion and fancy,
Which fires earth's engines within.
If such simple love keeps this little ball rollin'
Then Whose makes the universe spin?"

John answers that question in these familiar words: "For
God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever
believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life" (John 3:16).

Salvation began in the great ocean of God's love. "For
God so loved the world." The first verse most children learn is the
hardest to believe: "God is love" (1 John 4:8). It is easier
to believe God is passive or God is angry than to believe God is love.
Why? Because from the earliest age most us experience ourselves as objects
of disapproval. Every child learns to say, "No," before he/she
learns to say, "Yes." It is easier to believe that God ignores
us or God is mad at us than to believe God loves us.

How much does God love us? How can love be measured? In
pounds? In yards? In gallons? In hours? If human love cannot be measured,
how much less can we compute God's love? Paul prays that "you, being rooted
and grounded in love, may have the power to comprehend with all the saints
what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love
of Christ which surpasses knowledge" (Ephesians 3:17-19).

Can you calculate the capacity of a box with these dimensions:
length, infinite; width, infinite; height, infinite. Infinity times infinity
times infinity equals infinity. That's the size of God's love. Although
he does not measure the infinite, Paul gives us

Four
Dimensions Of God's Love

First, consider the breadth of God's love. The Bible
doesn't say, God so loved the Jews, or God so loved the church, but God
so loved the world. His love is without the kind of barriers that limit
lesser human love. Jesus said, "As the Father loved me, so I love
you" (John 15:9). We see God's love in Christ. His love was without
class barriers: he dined with Zacchaeus, the despised Publican (Luke 19:5).
His love was without race barriers: he responded to the plea of the Syrophonecian
woman (Mark 7:26). His love was without national barriers: he honored
the Roman centurion (Matthew 8:10). His love was without popularity barriers:
he befriended sinners and social outcasts (Matthew 11:19). His love was
without financial barriers: he praised the widow who gave two mites (Mark
12:34). His love was without pride barriers: he washed the disciples feet
(John 13:14). His love was without denominational barriers: he rebuked
the disciples for their intolerance toward a follower who was not one
of the twelve (Mark 9:37). His love was without age barriers: he enjoyed
the company of little children (Mark 10:15). Jesus loved everybody without
discrimination.

"For the love of God is broader than the measure
of man's mind.
And the heart of the eternal is most wonderfully kind."
(Frederick Faber)

Second, consider the length of God's love. It is without
end. Jeremiah declared, "God loves you with an everlasting love"
(Jeremiah 31:3). Paul asks, "What can separate us from the love of
Christ? Can tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness,
or peril or sword? No, in all these things we are more than conquerors
through him who loved us. For I am persuaded that neither things
present nor things to come (neither circumstances nor contingencies) can
separate us from the love of God which in Christ Jesus our Lord"
(Romans 5:7-8).

Third, consider the depth of God's love. It is without
self-interest. There is no reason for God's love except for God's will
(Romans 9:11-16). You don't have to change and be good to be loved by
God. You are loved by God so that you can change and be good. And after
a thousand years of changing and growing into the likeness of Jesus, God
will still love you not one bit more than he does right now. No matter
what you do, you can't make God love you nor can you make him stop loving
you. Love that you do something to deserve is not love at all. It is usually
the product of a sick home and produces a sick theology. God's love can't
be earned. It is total and unconditional. God loves you; not because you
are lovable but because he is love, not because he needs to receive but
because he delights to give.

Fourth, consider the height of God's love. It is
without hypocrisy. Jesus, who showed us God's love, never lowered his
standards for anyone, regardless of how important they were and however
much their discipleship would have helped him. He was interested in them,
not in his own advantage. To Nicodemus, politically great, he said, "You
must be born again"  you have to start all over from the beginning
(John 3:3). To the scribe, ecclesiastically great, he said, "Follow
me, if you like, but you will have nowhere to lay your head" (Matthew
8:19-20). To the rich man, financially great, he said, "Your riches are your hindrance, give them to the
poor" (Matthew 19:16-22). To Simon the Pharisee, socially great,
he said, "You love little for only in a little way have you sought
or received forgiveness" (Luke 7:39-48).

When the gospel says God loves you, it means he really loves
you  not with a grandfatherly benevolence that drowsily wishes you
to be happy in your own way, not with the cold philanthropy of a do-gooder
whose charity serves his own tax advantage, not with the care of a host
who feels responsible for the comfort of his guest BUT the consuming
fire himself, the love that made the worlds, persistent as an artist's
love for a painting, despotic as a master's love for a pet, jealous as
a husband's love for his wife or a wife's love for her husband. Even so,
God loves you!

God
Loves You Personally

He loves you in spite of your feelings of insignificance.
God does not love the world generally, but you specifically: you, one
person out of two billion inhabitants on earth; one generation out of
thousands of generations, one planet out of multiplied millions of planets
and stars. If God were to send an angel to look for our world amid the
glittering hosts of heaven, it would be like sending a child to Huntington
Beach to find one particular grain of sand. But God found you and embraced
you with his love. If God has a wallet, your picture is in it. You are
one of his children. A few years ago when my children were small we needed
to buy a new car. I asked my daughter to suppose a man offered me a choice
between two things: a brand new car, the best car ever made, or you. "Which
do you think I would choose?" I asked.
"You would choose me," she answered.
"That's right," I said. "But do you know why?"
"Because you love me."
"That's right. I'd choose you because I love you. But there is
another reason. Can you think of it?"
"No."
"It's because you love me. If I had the best car in the world, I
could love it, but it could never love me back. And that's the reason
you are more important to God than all the galaxies and stars in the universe. He can
love them, but they can't love him back. But you can do something the
stars, planets and galaxies can't do. You can love God. And he loves you in spite
of your feelings of insignificance."

And he loves you in spite of your feelings of unloveliness.
God showed his love toward us in that while we were yet sinners, Christ
died for us (Romans 5:8). He loved an adulterer, a cheater, a beggar,
a demoniac and YOU! He loved you so much that if you were the only sinner
in the world, he would still have gone to the cross for you alone. "It
was his love for me that nailed him to the tree to die in agony for all
my sins." It was love held him to the cross. The nails were only
symbols to those who would doubt.

The love of God is not something to be admired from a distance,
but something to be experienced personally. I can understand why someone
would run away from the wrath of God, but why would anyone run away from
the love of God? Read this aloud with your name inserted: "For God
so loved _________ that he gave his one and only Son, that if ___________
believes in him __________ shall not perish but have eternal life."